Make vs Zapier — Visual Workflow Builder vs App Connector King
🏆 Winner: It's Not Either/Or — It's the Order You Learn Them
Zapier wins for beginners, simple automations, and teams that need the widest app library (7,000+ apps). Make (formerly Integromat) wins for complex multi-step workflows, cost efficiency, and visual debugging. The smart play: start with Zapier free tier for basic automations, then add Make when you need branching logic, data transformation, or scenarios with 10+ steps — at 1/3 the cost per operation.
Quick Comparison: At a Glance
| Category | Make | Zapier | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free Tier | 1,000 ops/month | 100 tasks/month | Make (10x) |
| Paid Start | $10.59/mo (Core, 10K ops) | $19.99/mo (Starter, 750 tasks) | Make |
| App Integrations | 2,000+ | 7,000+ | Zapier |
| Workflow Builder | Visual drag-and-drop canvas | Linear step editor | Make |
| Multi-Step Logic | ✅ Routes, iterators, aggregators | ✅ Paths, filters, formatters | Make |
| Error Handling | Visual replay, partial execution | Auto-replay (paid plans) | Make |
| Data Transformation | Built-in functions, JSON/XML/CSV | Formatter (limited on Starter) | Make |
| Execution Speed | Near real-time (polling 1-15 min) | Instant (webhooks) / 1-15 min | Zapier |
| Team Features | Teams plan ($37/mo, 5 users) | Team plan ($69/mo, unlimited users) | Make |
| Learning Curve | Moderate (1-2 hours to comfort) | Easy (15 minutes to first zap) | Zapier |
Deep Dive: The 5 Differences That Matter
1. Workflow Complexity: Canvas vs Linear
Make's visual canvas is the biggest differentiator. You can see every step, every branch, every data transformation at a glance. Build a scenario that has 5 paths depending on data conditions, merge them back together, and see exactly what happened at each step in the execution history. For automations with more than 3-4 steps, Make's visual debugging pays for itself in saved troubleshooting time.
Zapier's linear editor is simpler — you add steps one at a time in a straight line. Paths (Zapier's branching feature) let you fork workflows with if/then conditions, but you can't merge paths back together or create loops. For simple "when X happens, do Y" automations, this is perfectly fine. For complex data pipelines, it gets messy fast.
2. Operations Pricing: The Real Cost Difference
This is where Make destroys Zapier for volume automations:
| Plan Level | Make | Zapier | Make Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry Paid | $10.59/mo — 10,000 ops | $19.99/mo — 750 tasks | 89% cheaper per op |
| Mid Tier | $18.82/mo — 50,000 ops | $49.00/mo — 2,000 tasks | 96% cheaper per op |
| High Volume | $118.82/mo — 500,000 ops | $133.50/mo — 50,000 tasks | 91% cheaper per op |
Critical distinction: Make counts operations (each module execution counts as 1 op). Zapier counts tasks (each successful action step counts as 1 task). A 5-step automation in Make uses ~5 ops. In Zapier, it uses ~5 tasks. But Make gives you 10x-50x more capacity per dollar, so the per-automation-run cost is dramatically lower.
Winner: Make — And it's not close. If you're running more than 10 automations, Make's pricing advantage compounds monthly.
3. App Library: Zapier's Moat
Zapier's 7,000+ integrations is the largest automation library on the market. If a SaaS tool has an API, it probably has a Zapier integration. This is Zapier's biggest and most durable competitive advantage — it's a network effect: apps build Zapier integrations because Zapier has the most users, and users pick Zapier because it has the most apps.
Make's 2,000+ integrations covers all major apps (Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, Slack, Notion, Airtable, Shopify, HubSpot, Salesforce, etc.) but lacks the long-tail niche tools. If you use a specialized industry tool, check Make's library before committing.
Zapier — Raw breadth. But check your specific stack — Make might cover everything you need.
4. Error Handling & Debugging
Make's execution history shows you the exact data at every step of every scenario run. You can click on a failed module, see the input data, see the error message, fix the configuration, and re-run just that step. For production automations that run 1,000+ times per day, this is a sanity-saver.
Zapier's task history shows you success/failure per step but less granular data. Auto-replay (paid plans) retries failed steps automatically. Good enough for simple automations, frustrating for complex ones.
Make — Visual debugging with partial re-execution is a game-changer for complex flows.
5. Team & Enterprise Features
For small-to-medium teams, Make offers better value: $37/mo for 5 users with shared scenarios, folders, and permissions. Zapier team plan starts at $69/mo with unlimited users and shared workspaces.
At the enterprise level, both offer SSO, audit logs, and dedicated support. Zapier's enterprise plan starts at custom pricing (typically $1,000+/mo). Make's enterprise is also custom.
Make — better team pricing at small scale.
The Decision Framework
🟣 Choose Make When...
- You need multi-step workflows (5+ steps per automation)
- You need branching logic, loops, or data aggregation
- Cost per operation matters — Make is 10-50x cheaper per op
- You want visual debugging with step-by-step data inspection
- Your apps are covered in Make's 2,000+ library
- You're building complex data pipelines or ETL workflows
🔵 Choose Zapier When...
- You're new to automation and want the shortest learning curve
- You need a niche app integration (7,000+ library)
- Your automations are simple 1-3 step workflows
- You need instant webhook triggers with minimal latency
- Time-to-first-automation matters more than cost
- You want the widest community, templates, and tutorials